The SeaMicro SM15000 also includes AMD's new Freedom Fabric storage fabric that connects the 10U server chassis to over 5 petabytes of storage, which AMD said makes it suitable for high-capacity storage and for big data applications. AMD also introduced new storage arrays to go with its Freedom Fabric technology.

The introduction of the new server platform, which will soon incorporate the latest Xeon processors, also shows that AMD is learning to work closely with Intel, its primary rival in the processor market but now a partner in future server developments.

The new SeaMicro SM15000 server system is based on SeaMicro's single-socket micro server boards, which are smaller than a letter-sized piece of paper but come built with an AMD or Intel processor, with up to 32 GB of DRAM for Intel processors or 64 GB of DRAM for AMD processors and 16 10-Gbit Ethernet ports.

The SeaMicro server line started out with 32-bit Intel Atom processors and was last updated with 64-bit Atom processors.

AMD on Monday unveiled two new flagship servers under the SeaMicro 15000 name.

One model, to be based on AMD's upcoming Opteron "Piledriver" processor, will feature 64 8-core processors totaling 512 cores per 10U system or 2,024 cores in a full rack. Each processor will come attached to 64 GB of DRAM, providing a total of 4.1 TB of DRAM per 10U system or 16.4 TB per rack.

The other model, to be based on Intel's Xeon E3-1265Lv2 "Ivy Bridge" processors, will feature half the cores and memory of the "Piledriver" version, AMD said.

Both these servers are expected to ship in November.

In the meantime, AMD is currently shipping a version built with Intel Xeon E3-1260L "Sandy Bridge" processors.

Just as important as the new higher-density processor core design is the new servers' Freedom Fabric storage design.